In one of the hottest places on Earth, along an arid
stretch of East Africa’s Afar region, it’s possible to stand on the exact spot
where, deep underground, the continent is splitting apart.
This desolate expanse sits atop the juncture of three
tectonic plates that are very slowly peeling away from each other, a complex
geological process that scientists say will eventually cleave Africa in two and
create a new ocean basin millions of years from now. For now, the most obvious
evidence is a 35-mile-long crack in the Ethiopian desert.
The African continent’s tectonic fate has been studied
for several decades, but new satellite measurements are helping scientists
better understand the transition and are offering valuable tools to study the
gradual birth of a new ocean in one of the most geologically unique spots on
the planet.
“This is the only place on Earth where you can study how
continental rift becomes an oceanic rift,” said Christopher Moore, a Ph.D.
doctoral student at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom, who has been
using satellite radar to monitor volcanic activity in East Africa that is
associated with the continent’s breakup.
It’s thought that Africa’s new ocean will take at least
5 million to 10 million years to form, but the Afar region’s fortuitous
location at the boundaries of the Nubian, Somali and Arabian plates makes it a
unique laboratory to study elaborate tectonic processes.
Earth’s crust is made up of a dozen large tectonic
plates, which are irregularly shaped, rocky slabs that constantly mash against,
climb over, slide under or stretch apart from one another.
For the past 30 million years, the Arabian plate has
been moving away from Africa, a process that created the Red Sea and the Gulf
of Aden between the two connected landmasses. But the Somali plate in eastern
Africa is also stretching away from the Nubian plate, peeling apart along the
East African Rift Valley, which extends through Ethiopia and Kenya.
But there are still some big unknowns, including what is
causing the continent to rift apart. Some think that a massive plume of
superheated rocks rising from the mantle beneath East Africa could be driving
the region’s continental rift.
In recent years, GPS instruments have revolutionized
this field of research, allowing scientists to make precise measurements of how
the ground moves over time, said Ken Macdonald, a marine geophysicist and
professor emeritus at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
“With GPS measurements, you can measure rates of
movement down to a few millimeters per year,” Macdonald said. “As we get more
and more measurements from GPS, we can get a much greater sense of what’s going
on.”
Detailed satellite observations combined with additional
field research could also help scientists piece together what is happening
underground in the Afar region. But if the area is a living laboratory to study
continental rift, the environment doesn’t make it easy.
“It has been called Dante’s inferno,” said Cynthia
Ebinger, a geophysicist at Tulane University in New Orleans, who has conducted
numerous field research campaigns in the Afar region. “The hottest inhabited
town on the Earth’s surface is in the Afar. Daytime temperatures often go to
130 degrees Fahrenheit and they cool off to a balmy 95 degrees at night.”
Some of Ebinger’s research in the field focused on a
giant, 35-mile crack that opened up in the Ethiopian desert in 2005. The
violent split was equivalent to several hundred years of tectonic plate
movement in just a few days, she said.
Since then, Ebinger’s work has zeroed in on what
triggers these extreme events. Her research suggests that the rifting process isn’t
always smooth and steady but can sometimes be defined by intense jerks along
the way.
“We’re trying to understand the straw that breaks the
camel’s back,” she said.
Ebinger thinks built-up pressure from rising magma could
be triggering the explosive events seen in the Afar region. She likened the
scenario to overfilling a balloon and creating so much tension on the outer
surface that it doesn’t take much to relieve the pressure and cause the balloon
to pop.
Over time, these rifting events will reshape the African
continent.
Each plate boundary in the Afar region is spreading at
different speeds, but the combined forces of these separating plates is
creating what’s known as a mid-ocean ridge system, where eventually a new ocean
will form.
“The Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea will flood in over the
Afar region and into the East African Rift Valley and become a new ocean, and
that part of East Africa will become its own separate small continent,”
Macdonald said.
The three plates are separating at different speeds. The
Arabian plate is moving away from Africa at a rate of about 1 inch per year,
while the two African plates are separating even slower, between half an inch
to 0.2 inches per year, according to Macdonald.
The rifting process may be happening at a glacial pace,
but researchers say there are clear signs that this transition is taking place.
As the plates peel apart, material from deep inside Earth moves to the surface
and forms oceanic crust at the ridges.
“We can see that oceanic crust is starting to form,
because it’s distinctly different from continental crust in its composition and
density,” Moore said.
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